Utilise ILS to support growing the overall reinsurance pie: Execs

The wealth of alternative capital in the global reinsurance market could be utilised to increase demand and grow the overall reinsurance pie, creating opportunities for insurance-linked securities (ILS) to meaningfully enter new regions and perils, according to industry experts.
During the 2015 Artemis ILS Bermuda Executive Roundtable, industry executives and experts discussed the potential for ILS to broaden its scope and aid the expansion and influence of the international insurance and reinsurance markets.

Despite reports towards the end of 2015 and also during the key January 2016 renewals that some ILS, or third-party investor-backed capital was starting to enter casualty lines in a greater way, for the most part it’s still heavily focused on the highly competitive and pressured property cat space – where barriers to entry are lower and the risks are better understood owing to advanced modelling capabilities and vast amounts of historical data.

However, as noted by Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Aon Securities, Paul Schultz, “If you’re not growing, if the pie’s not growing, the alternative market can only get so big. It’s the willingness to write new risks, and creating more innovative financial solutions for clients that’s offering new growth opportunities.

“If we’re not providing greater solutions that actually offer the ability to put more risk on balance sheets, I don’t think that we are going to grow.”

Currently, following further rate declines across the majority of re/insurance business lines at 1/1 the global reinsurance market is awash with capital from both alternative and traditional sources, which has exacerbated the supply/demand imbalance and intensely competitive operating landscape.

One way to alleviate some of the pressures engrossing the sector, while also creating opportunities for players to enter new risks and regions, is to deploy some of the alternative capital via innovative, efficient structures into new areas, ultimately expanding the reach of insurance.

“This is not about making reinsurance cheaper and cheaper day after day after day,” said Potter, “it’s about growing the demand pie and then using capital markets’ capacity to efficiently provide the support to those parts of the insurance market where it’s needed most.”

The structures and features of the ILS sector, including collateralized reinsurance, sidecar ventures, cat bond lite transactions, parametric triggers, to name but a few, are a sign of the innovative qualities the space has shown in recent times, a notion highlighted by Tom Johansmeyer, Assistant Vice President, Reinsurance Services, ISO.

“The market is evolving to bring the right structures to bear, to people who need to manage the capital most. That’s what’s crucial, I don’t have to choose a 144A traditional, I’ve got choices now, and these developments are exactly why cedents have the choice to manage their capital effectively,” said Johansmeyer.

Adding; “Our goal should be to drive greater access to more efficient risk transfer and to generate the returns we need to, for the people who fund us.”

So the structures and capacity are there, and as ILS investors and sponsors alike continue to enhance their understanding of the asset class and mature in terms of knowledge, willingness and sophistication, the ability to utilise the ILS space in a more meaningful, influential manner becomes clear.

“There’s a fundamental opportunity here now, in this timeframe, to use this alternative capital as a means to expand the insurance market as opposed to simply trying to reduce the cost of reinsurance, which is a very narrow objective. It would be unfortunate if that’s all that happened,” said Samir Shah, formerly of AIG.

Whether increasing insurance penetration levels in emerging markets like Asia-Pacific, parts of Latin America, China or India, among others, or making more affordable protection available to some of the world’s more developed markets, like U.S. flood, ILS capacity and solutions could be used by primary players and traditional reinsurers to support their expansion into new regions and perils.

Entering new markets will increase the demand for reinsurance, which in turn will remove some of the excess capital in the space and perhaps contribute to a turn from the softening market environment.

Shah underlines that while the market has a lot of capital, “and we should fill the protection gap and we should find ways to put that capital to work,” in places like California, for example, it’s actually the cost of that capital that hinders insurance consumption.

By utilising the wealth of efficient ILS, or alternative reinsurance capital to supplement existing re/insurance programmes, or to establish innovative and new solutions, companies could reduce operating costs that could result in a cheaper product to the end consumer, another driver of increased demand.

Claude Lefebvre, Chief Underwriting Officer (CUO), Casualty & Specialty, Hamilton Re said; “In the end, it’s all about how much money we have, and the more money we have in the market, the more we can do with it. Potentially, if you can spread it out to a lot of people, ILS can play a big part.”

Artemis ILS Bermuda Executive Roundtable 2015

Download a copy of our report from the first Artemis ILS Bermuda Executive Roundtable, in which our participants discuss burning issues affecting the sector, with an eye on innovation and what the future might hold for ILS in Bermuda, and beyond.